Merkel honours anti-Muslim cartoonist

Merkel and WestergaardGerman Chancellor Angela Merkel has defended Danish cartoonist Kurt Westergaard, whose cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad caused anger in 2006. A depiction of Muhammad’s turban as a fused bomb sparked global outrage when it was published in Denmark.

Presenting him with a press freedom award, Mrs Merkel said Mr Westergaard was entitled to draw his caricatures. “Europe is a place where a cartoonist is allowed to draw something like this,” she said.

Germany’s Central Muslim Council (ZMD) criticised Ms Merkel for attending the award ceremony. A ZMD spokesman, Aiman Mazyek, told public broadcaster Deutschlandradio that the Chancellor was honouring someone “who in our eyes kicked our prophet, and therefore kicked all Muslims”. He said giving Mr Westergaard the prize in a “highly charged and heated time” was “highly problematic”.

BBC News, 8 September 2010

Perhaps Merkel might like to follow this up by promoting an exhibition of caricatures from Der Stürmer – all in the interests of celebrating Europe’s commitment to freedom of expression, you understand.

Qaradawi calls for peaceful protests against Burn a Koran Day

Qaradawi2The International Union of Islamic Scholars has urged Muslims to react peacefully to the planned burning of copies of the Holy Quran by a small church in the US on the ninth anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks on Saturday.

The head of the Union, Dr Yusuf Al Qaradawi, in a statement yesterday called on fellow Muslims to protest in a peaceful manner and seek legal recourse against the group. “The man who has given the deplorable call and his group must be prosecuted,” said Dr Qaradawi. “The call is against the teachings of Christianity.”

The Doha Centre for Interfaith Dialogue has also condemned the call and said it reflected extremism and ignorance and ran contrary to the basic tenets of Christianity. “Christianity preaches peace and peaceful coexistence,” said Dr Ibrahim Al Nuaimi, the centre’s chairman.

The Peninsula, 9 September 2010


The problem with Qaradawi’s proposal that pastor Terry Jones should be prosecuted is that the First Amendment of the US Constitution, which guarantees the right to free speech, has been used to prevent the introduction of laws against incitement to hatred. Indeed, in the US it is possible to incite not only hatred but even violence against Muslims, as long as the call to violence remains generalised. So opponents of Jones’s vile behaviour do not in fact have any legal recourse.

It’s also worth considering what would happen in the UK if someone were to repeat Jones’s actions here. The reality is that a successful prosecution would be impossible under the existing religious hatred law, as it would be necessary to prove that the individual intended to incite hatred against Muslims, which they would certainly deny, and that the words and actions should be threatening, which they would not be.

On the other hand, if someone were to incite hatred against the Jewish community in the UK by erecting signs reading “Judaism is of the Devil”, burning copies of the Torah and claiming that Jews are the agents of Satan, then that individual could be successfully prosecuted – because Jews are defined as a mono-ethnic faith group and are therefore covered by the law against incitement to racial hatred, which requires neither proof of intent nor that incitement should take the form of threats.

Amsterdam VVD leader opposes deal with Wilders

Eric van der Burg, leader of the right-wing Liberal VVD in Amsterdam, is against his party forming a new government with Geert Wilders’ anti-Islam PVV, local tv station AT5 reports.

“The PVV says things about large parts of the Netherlands and large parts of Amsterdam which I do not recognise. That is the main reason I say ‘you should not want to work with the PVV’.”

The national VVD, Christian Democrats and PVV are hoping to soon restart talks on forming a right-wing government.

Dutch News, 9 September 2010

Date set for Wilders court case

The court case against MP Geert Wilders, who faces discrimination and inciting hatred charges, will begin on October 4 in Amsterdam district court. The court says it needs five days to hear evidence in the case. The court will pass sentence on November 2.

The MP faces five charges of religious insult and anti-Muslim incitement. In January, the public prosecution department extended the prosecution case to include inciting hatred of Muslims, Moroccans and non-Western immigrants.

Dutch News, 9 September 2010

Jones calls off Qur’an burning

Terry Jones cartoon

A Florida pastor Thursday called off his controversial plan to burn copies of the Quran on the ninth anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack.

The Rev. Terry Jones of the Gainesville, Florida-based Dove World Outreach Center, standing with a Florida Muslim leader, also said the imam who planned a mosque and Islamic center near ground zero in New York has agreed to move it to another location. But the imam who appeared with him said that Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf in New York agreed to speak with Jones about possibly moving the center.

A spokesman from Soho Properties told CNN producer Vivienne Foley that “the Muslim community center called Park51 in lower Manhattan is not being moved.”

CNN, 9 September 2010

Update:  See “Quran burning on again? Florida pastor says maybe”, MSNBC, 9 September 2010

And “Fla. pastor, imam at odds over Quran-burning deal”, Washington Post, 10 September 2010

Also “No deal made to halt Quran burning, Muslim leader says”, CNN, 10 September 2010

Hudson, New York: mosque vandalised

Hudson mosque graffitiA racial slur was spray-painted on the wall of a mosque in the city of Hudson. The words appeared sometime between midnight and 5 a.m. Scrawled in red on the blue wall of a mosque in Hudson, they appear to target this Muslim community.

Abdus Miah, a member of the mosque, is also a city Alderman. “I thought… maybe somebody hates us.  I was thinking that way. Or something like that. I don’t know. We never faced any kind of problem after 9-11. This is the first time,” said Miah.

City Council President Don Moore was quick to condemn the vandalism and says the police are taking this very seriously. “In the current atmosphere, with the degree of uncertainty that Muslims in this country face, we don’t want to take anything for granted,” said Moore.

This is the holy month of Ramadan. People who gathered at the mosque said they are surprised to see something like this, in a racially mixed and generally tolerant city.

“Well I was stunned,” said Moore. “Because Hudson is a very diverse community and we’re proud of it. And so to see even one person take advantage of a house of worship, regardless of the faith, is something we want to put a stop to immediately.”

WNYT, 9 September 2010

See also WXXA, 9 September 2010

Posted in USA